Attorneys for alleged San Diego sex abuse victims criticize appointment of cardinal

Critics argue that Cardinal McElroy has been an institutional defender of sex abuse in the Catholic Church

NBC San Diego

January 7, 2025

By Ryan Murray and City News Service

 

Attorneys representing alleged victims of sexual abuse by priests in the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego Tuesday criticized Pope Francis' appointment of Cardinal Robert W. McElroy, bishop of San Diego, to become the new Archbishop of Washington, D.C.

McElroy, 70, will succeed retiring Cardinal Wilton D. Gregory in March. Until a new bishop is named, a Diocesan administrator will oversee the San Diego diocese on an interim basis, according to the Diocese of San Diego.

McElroy was named bishop of San Diego in 2015 and elevated to cardinal in 2022.

"I am grateful for the opportunity to serve the Catholic community in our nation's capital and for the confidence His Holiness has placed in me, but I have truly loved the last ten years I've spent as bishop of San Diego," McElroy said in a statement. "I have never in my life felt more welcomed, more supported or more rewarded than I felt sharing my ministry with the priests, the women religious, and the faithful parishioners of our diocese."

However, critics said McElroy has been an institutional defender of sex abuse in the Catholic Church and his appointment will only continue bringing scandal to the beleaguered Washington, D.C. archdiocese.

"Cardinal McElroy has been attacked by conservatives in the Catholic Church and the political right for his progressive views. This ignores the fact that he has been anything but progressive when it comes to protecting victims of child sexual assault in San Diego," said attorney Morgan Stewart. "Hundreds of children were raped and sexually abused by priests in the San Diego diocese, and many are now seeking justice. These victims have suffered pain for a lifetime because of their horrendous sexual abuse by San Diego priests."

The attorneys said that unlike Los Angeles Archbishop Jose Gomez who reached a settlement of 1,353 childhood sexual abuse claims, McElroy put the San Diego Archdiocese into bankruptcy last year "hoping to delay or deny compensation to more than 500 victims."

In 2023, McElroy announced the possibility of bankruptcy, writing then that the Diocese "must face the staggering legal costs" in response to lawsuits alleging abuse dating back as far as 1945.

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